Another Day, Another Marijuana Production Cut in Canada

gb123

Well-Known Member
At this time last year, investor hopes for the cannabis industry were pretty high. Canada had just become the first industrialized country in the modern era to legalize recreational marijuana in October 2018, derivative pot products looked to be less than a year from hitting dispensary shelves in Canada, and multiple U.S. states were in the process of greenlighting medical cannabis or recreational pot.
However, over the past year, marijuana companies and investors alike have seen their hopes and dreams for the pot industry go up in smoke.
Another Canadian cannabis stock is cutting its production

With Canadian pot stocks facing an odd situation of oversupply in a number of provinces despite the fact that most consumer demand is not being met by legal-channel product, multiple growers have announced production cuts.
It began with The Green Organic Dutchman (OTC:TGODF) in October. Green Organic Dutchman had told investors earlier in the year that it was on track to eventually hit 219,000 kilos of peak annual output, placing it among Canada's top five growers. However, in a recent corporate update, the company noted its intention to utilize only four grow rooms at its flagship Valleyfield property in 2020, as well as grow rooms at its Ancaster campus. All told, Green Organic Dutchman expects to yield 20,000 to 22,000 kilos next year, which is just 1/10th of its peak potential.
Not long thereafter, Quebec-based HEXO (NYSE:HEXO) announced production cuts. In an effort to better align the company's costs with current market conditions, HEXO has decided to cut 200 jobs, as well as idle its Niagara grow farm, which was acquired with its Newstrike Brands purchase. Despite forecasting 150,000 kilos of peak annual production, HEXO's run-rate output in 2020 is probably going to be closer to 80,000 kilos.
Next up was Aurora Cannabis (NYSE:ACB), the world's most popular pot stock. Also aiming to conserve capital, Aurora plans to utilize only six grow rooms at its flagship Aurora Sun campus in Alberta, and will completely idle its under-construction Aurora Nordic 2 facility in Denmark. These grow farms were expected to generate at least 230,000 and 120,000 kilos for Aurora Cannabis, respectively, once fully operational. Now, Aurora Cannabis' run-rate output by the end of 2020 has been effectively cut in half.
Four white piggy banks with progressively smaller cannabis plants growing out of them.

Image source: Getty Images.
Then came OrganiGram Holdings (NASDAQ:OGI), the newest Canadian cannabis stock to cut production. On Monday, Nov. 25, New Brunswick-based OrganiGram announced that it would be halting Phase 4C construction at its Moncton facility. Phase 4C was expected to increase OrganiGram's output by 24,000 kilos at full capacity. Assuming the company achieves full licensing for Phase 4B, it'll be operating with an annual run rate of 89,000 kilos, as opposed to the 113,000 kilos at full capacity that management has touted.
Altogether, and inclusive of CannTrust's cultivation and sales licenses being suspended, around 1 million kilos of peak annual output have been removed from the Canadian marketplace for 2020.

It'll be a while before growers are meeting legal-channel demand
Though removing this production will certainly help reduce costs for pot stocks and partially help to ease supply concerns in key provinces like Ontario, none of the issues facing cannabis stocks are going to disappear overnight.
For instance, Health Canada changed its cultivation licensing application process midyear, which now requires growers to have completed their grow farms prior to submitting their application. This should help eliminate underfunded projects, but it's not going to make the agency's licensing backlog disappear overnight. Long wait times to bring product to market should remain the norm for the foreseeable future.
The rollout of dispensaries in Ontario also isn't a quick fix. Even with a second lottery to assign dispensary licenses that could nearly triple the province's physical footprint, there will still be a significant shortage of storefronts. This suggests the black market will continue to thrive, with the pricing gap between legal and illicit marijuana further driving consumers to black market products.
 

BurtMaklin

Well-Known Member
Let's get real here. What are you going to do with 2.2 million pounds of b grade? The market is already saturated with A grade for cheap.
We could roll the worlds largest, most toxic joint and force all the LPs, politicians and investors to smoke it and filter that shit through their lungs before it gets released into the atmosphere and poison what's left of our environment.
 
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